Lower UTI in Chronic Kidney Disease (or in AKI)

CKD 4

Important: Therapy

Trimethoprim (with caution) 200mg PO 12 hourly

or

Cefalexin 500mg PO 12 hourly

 

or

Ciprofloxacin 250mg PO 12 hourly (consider safety issues)

Notes:

CKD 5

Important: Therapy

Cefalexin 250mg PO 12 hourly

 

Penicillin allergy:

Ciprofloxacin 250mg PO 12 hourly (consider safety issues)

 

Notes:

Important: Notes

  • Avoid nitrofurantoin in patients with CKD 4 or 5.
  • Trimethoprim can be used in patients with CKD 3 (unless baseline K is high). Trimethoprim can cause a temporary increase in serum potassium and creatinine during treatment.
  • Ensure samples are marked with CKD 4 or 5 (or AKI) to allow lab to release sensitivities to other agents such as cephalexin, pivmecillinam, fosfomycin

Alternative options for CKD4 or 5:

Pivmecillinam (if sensitivities support)  - unlikely to be effective in patients with little residual kidney function

400mg STAT, then 200mg 8 hourly PO (to a total course of 10 tablets)

 

Fosfomycin

If eGFR>10ml/min - 3g stat for female UTI (repeat 3g dose after 72 hours for male UTI)

 

Treatment duration:

Female UTI - 3 days

Male UTI - 7 days 

 

Reference - Renal Drug Database

To get access to Renal Drug Database - email Ann.lees@nes.scot.nhs.uk for user name and password